Photography Know-How
Photo of the Week by Bob Crum. Memorable Day ceremony, raising the flag, at the Bardsdale Cemetery. Photo data: Manual mode, ISO 160, 16-300mm lens at 18mm, f/11 at 1/250 second.
Photo of the Week by Bob Crum. Memorable Day ceremony, raising the flag, at the Bardsdale Cemetery. Photo data: Manual mode, ISO 160, 16-300mm lens at 18mm, f/11 at 1/250 second.
Photo potpourri...

Last week, the parade. Now, on to the other festivities. With giggling children everywhere, it's near impossible to attend the recent May Festival carnival and not get in a good mood. Furthermore, the music venue was alive with folks kicking up their heels... so to speak. Those not dancing were sipping brewskies in the beer garden. Judging by the nasty look I got I should not have asked for ice tea. But I digress.

On the carnival midway, I took advantage of the many opportunities to shoot using various methods to illustrate different ways to convey a particular point. For example, 'blur' can be accomplished two ways. Hold steady the camera set at a slow shutter speed of about 1/15 second and press the shutter button when the subject comes into the frame. The background remains in focus but the subject gets blurred illustrating movement. The other method is to increase the shutter speed and pan the subject... i.e. … follow the subject passing by which will result in the subject in focus but the background blurred. Most often requires a some trial and error. Accidentally, the blue Buffalo Bomber ended being a little of both. C'est la vie. There is no right or wrong method. Simply personal preference. Generally I prefer shooting at a higher shutter speed and blurring the background. Can you pick the photos I shot using either method and determine which method was used on each?

Oh, check out the gorgeous, vivacious May Festival carnival mermaid. Made my day! If it were not for so much darn security I would have kidnapped her! Maybe next year. (I'm thinking helicopter heist! )

Night scenes are most interesting because of various colors of light. But mixed lighting is a nightmare for the camera. Accordingly, I almost always set white balance on automatic (AWB). One of these days I'll delve into some of the technical stuff like white balance and its significance. Stay tuned. For now, let if suffice to say that even if the camera misinterprets the light creating color issues it's usually correctable in post processing. Post processing (PP) is another topic to be covered some day. But not yet because I'm still trying to wean all you phonetographers off your smart phones and into 'real' photography with a real camera (hint) so post processing (editing) can wait a little longer. Pardon my teasing.

Back to photography. Just prior to the seven-gun salute by the honor guard, I set the camera on burst mode and fired off a series of photos upon hearing the word: FIRE! Well, out of 27 images, not one photo with a muzzle flash. NOT ONE! Again, if it weren't for bad luck, I'd have none! Wait! If you look closely, you'll see brass casings flying. That counts... right? To capture muzzle flash maybe I need to get a camera that can fire bursts of 50 photos/second. Yep, that'll do it! No it won't. Can't afford that camera so flying brass casings will have to suffice. For now.

Moving along, I selected the raising of the U. S. flag during the Memorable Day Ceremony at the Bardsdale Cemetery as the Photo of the Week. Indulge me while I briefly go off topic.

I've been photographing the Bardsdale Memorable Day Ceremony for many years yet the symbolic act of raising the U.S. flag is always an emotional experience. It profoundly demonstrates and acknowledges that our cherished freedoms that brave men and women fought and died for endures. One day... one act... to remind us of their ultimate sacrifice. See you next year, same place, to honor all those who shall forever be remembered.

Happy photoing!

Email comments, questions or suggestions to bob@fillmoregazette.com